Basic Needs of Food,
Shelter and Protection Are Unmet:
- Orphans and vulnerable children run a greater risk of being
malnourished than children who have healthy parents to care
for them. Some of the children in Goromonzi have been known
to eat grass when there is no other food.
- Traditionally, upon the death of a man, all his property
will go to his brothers and their families, not to his wives
and his children. This can lead to homelessness for his grieving
family. In some cases the boys are turned out of their birth
home to fend for themselves. More often the girls are taken
in by their extended families, but are often used as household
drudges or for prostitution. In both cases, they are denied
the chance to be educated.
- As their parents become increasingly ill and are no longer
able to work and care for their family, the children must
take on the adult responsibility of caregivers. They are
forced to become self-sufficient long before they are able
to succeed at it.
- With adults dying prematurely, children are forced into
early adulthood without the resources and guidance they need
to survive. They then have to adjust to that crisis, with
little or no support, and may suffer exploitation and abuse.
Anxiety, depression and anger have been found to be more
common among orphans than other children.
Family and Community Are Strained to the Breaking Point:
- In traditional communities in Zimbabwe, extended family
members care for orphaned children. Culturally, adoption
from outside the family is not acceptable. The family unit
becomes strained to the breaking point as grandparents and
older relatives struggle to support as many as twenty of
their young orphaned family members. In some cases older
relatives are so desperate to take care of the children that
they put the children on a bus to the capital city of Harare
in the hopes that they will find food or someone to care
for them there.
- In large, female-headed households
where orphans and vulnerable children are likely to live,
there are more people dependent on fewer wage earners.
Extra pressure is placed on the orphans and vulnerable
children to contribute financially to the household, and
with few options available, in some cases they take to
the streets to work, beg or seek food. It is not uncommon
for the older sister in the family to find herself an older “boyfriend” so
that she can get money to support her younger brothers
and sisters.
- Children who have lost one parent continue to live in the
care of a surviving parent or family member, but often have
to take on the responsibility of doing the housework, looking
after siblings and caring for the sick or dying parent. Children
who have lost one parent to AIDS are often at risk of losing
the other parent as well, since HIV can be transmitted within
the couple.
- Some people have called for an increase in institutional
care for children. However, this solution is not only expensive,
but it also has been found to be detrimental to the children
and should be considered a temporary option or a last resort.
Birthright for Bright Future Is Lost:
- Children grieving for dying or dead parents are often stigmatized
by society through their association with AIDS. The distress
and social isolation experienced by these children, both
before and after the death of their parent(s), is strongly
exacerbated by the shame, fear, and rejection that often
surrounds people affected by HIV and AIDS.
- Children orphaned by AIDS may loose the opportunity for
education, a critical part of building a future, when extended
families cannot afford to educate all the children of the
household. Often, the child's labor and income-generating
potential are required in the household. All schools require
tuition fees in Zimbabwe. For some families, the additional
burden of school fees is a major factor in deciding not to
take in additional children.
- Children may also have their schooling interrupted, or
halted altogether, or perform poorly in school as a result
of their situation. Orphans and vulnerable children may also
leave school to attend to ill family members, to work or
to look after young siblings.
- Children miss out on valuable life-skills and practical
knowledge that would have been passed on to them by their
parents had they not been ill or deceased. Without this knowledge,
and a basic education, children are more likely to face social,
economic and health problems in adulthood.
Often children who have lost their parents
to AIDS are assumed to be HIV positive themselves, adding to
the likelihood that they will face discrimination. In this
situation children may also be denied access to healthcare that
they need.

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